“Some of the most heinous U.S. war crimes committed during the Iraq War took place in the city of Fallujah,” The Intercept‘s Jeremy Scahill, who reported from Iraq during the U.S. invasion, wrote Wednesday on social media.
In a 2007 appearance on the Bill Moyers show, Scahill described the siege of Fallujah as “one of the most brutal and sustained U.S. operations of the occupation,” telling Moyers that the Pentagon’s murderous response to the killing of Blackwater contractors set a dangerous precedent.
In 2016, journalist Hope Hodge Seck wrote about what she called “the whisper campaign for a USS Fallujah.”
“At the time, it seemed unlikely to ever happen,” she tweeted Tuesday. “But now it has.”
Construction on the 45,000 metric-ton vessel, the first U.S. warship named after a post-9/11 battle, is set to begin this month at the Mississippi-based Ingalls Shipbuilding, which secured a $2.4 billion contract in October.
Civilians in Fallujah, meanwhile, continue to suffer from a sharp rise in birth defects that has occurred in the wake of the 2003 invasion.